Through personal essays, interviews, and conversations, contributors to this issue reflect on their early introductions to the Middle Ages and medievalism–and particularly on the ways that medievalisms shaped their early understandings of the Middle Ages. Some medievalists are introduced to the period as a child through a combination of fairytale, fantasy, and history in the form of stories, films, games, theme parks, and more. Others may come to the field of study by experiencing art and architecture–historical and historicizing–in museums, travel, or the classroom. The reflections in this issue celebrate such journeys, as well as those that may not have been positive experiences. Some contributions acknowledge and grapple with the ways that racist, sexist, and homo/transphobic perceptions of the medieval period shape current understandings of the Medieval and medievalism. Others reflect on how such medievalisms provided paths to expanding access to, or the scholarly study of, the global Middle Ages.
https://doi.org/10.61302/ZOQN5157
Contents
I. Introductions
Larisa Grollemond, Bryan C. Keene, and Mariah Proctor-Tiffany, Introduction: Encountering Medievalism
Larisa Grollemond, Tyler Gunther, Bryan C. Keene, and Mariah Proctor-Tiffany, A Conversation with Tyler Gunther (aka @GreedyPeasant)!
Issue Eleven Authors, Medievalism Favorites
II. Journey Across Time: The First Sparks of Medievalism
Brinna Michael, Kelin Michael, and Liam Michael, The Siblings’ Tale: Medievalism, Media, and Memories
Martha Easton, Castle Fever
Emily Shartrand, Don’t Judge a Book by its Cover: Picturing Girlhood in Medieval Inspired Children’s Literature
Alexandra Alvis, Rainbow Medievalism
Mariah Proctor-Tiffany, Finding Badass Women Through Medievalism
III. Taking Inspiration from the Past: Embodied Medievalism in Practice
Derrick Austin, Medieval Ekphrasis
Janet T. Marquardt, Medievalism at Age 9: Crafting a Model Castle and Countryside
Larisa Grollemond, Midwestern Medievalism
Lindsay Cook, Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame in the Making of a Medievalist
Christopher Herde, Open the Gates: Medievalism and the Movement Beyond Accuracy
Alan Perry, Emrys Brandt, and Mya Jones, But I wanted to be the Wizard: Medievalisms, Childhood, Adolescence, and Identity Formation
IV. Infinite Possibilities: The Ever-present Middle Ages
Tania Kolarik, From Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame to The Rivan Codex: How Late 20th Century Medievalism Shaped an Art Historian
Bryan C. Keene, Traveling the Medieval Multiverse To Find a Once and Future Queer Middle Ages
Tirumular (Drew) Narayanan, “The Sorcerer Has Many Names, Many Forms”: Finding Identity and “Crypto-Visuality” through Thulsa Doom
Tory Schendel-Vyvoda, A Reflective Journey: Connections to Medievalism and the Middle Ages
Alexa Sand and Annika Wiebe, Magic in the World